Does anyone else here also remember this classic BBC drama serial?
It must have been one of the most comprehensive radio productions ever undertaken by Radio 4 as it ran for sixteen (one hour) episodes and was thus able to do full justice to Victor Hugo's massive novel.

I remember listening avidly to every episode but, being a student in those days, had unfortunately no means of recording any of them. My personal radio set had no FM reception and so I had to rely on the good old Long Wave band frequency.

The BBC has informed me that the production does not survive in their sound archive, so this magnificent drama serial would appear to have been lost.

The Curator of the sound archives at the British Library very kindly provided the following information for me:

The series aired on Radio 4 between 2 May and 15 Aug 1976. I’m afraid it is not held by the British Library. However, I am told that at least some episodes survive in private collections.

Radio Times provided the following information for the first episode:

9.03 New Series

Les Misérables
By VICTOR HUGO

Adapted for radio in 16 parts by BARRY CAMPBELL, CONSTANCE COX and VAL GIELGUD

with
Robert Hardy as Victor Hugo
Trevor Martin as Jean Valjean

A classic story of the fight between good and evil and one man’s attempt to overcome his past.

I remember this extremely well and have a few moments somewhere on old audio cassette tapes I recorded from the radio at the time. I know it went out on Sunday nights rather than Saturday in what was then the classic serial slot. As it went out through most of the summer holidays (I was at school at the time) I tried to catch both the Sunday night broadcast and the Tuesday night repeat as I enjoyed it so much.

I recall that Judy Bennett (Shula from The Archers) was in it, playing one of the children's roles (Gavroche??) that she seemed to specialise in.

Given the amount of work that must have gone into a production of that scale it seems astonishing if it is not in a BBC vault somewhere. Only 5 years later a similar scale of project was undertaken by Radio 4 with "Lord of the Rings", which the BBC has since repeated and made commercially available on cassette and CD. So come on BBC, have another look in the cellar!

"Vivat Rex" from only a year later is currently being repeated on Radio 4 Extra. A project of similarly large scale, I guess the presence of Richard Burton, John Gielgud et al in the cast persuaded whoever decided what should be junked and what should be kept that it definitely belonged in the latter category.

The BBC aren't alone in their having lost so much material. Going off topic ITV were equally bad in their dumping of so much of TV material from the early 1970s. Being charitable to both organisations I suppose at the time they weren't to know that there would eventually be a potentially lucrative home entertainment market for such material with the advent of VHS and then DVD/BluRay (if they had then the contracts with performers might have reflected it) and there was only so much storage space available. And yet there are ancient things that have survived you felt sure (and in some cases hoped, given their cringeworthy nature after all these years!) would have been lost and others that have fallen through the cracks. A pity.

What a shame that this series has been lost. I was only 13 at the time but I remember listening to every episode. It was truly superb. I also loved the theme music and only discovered what it was years later when I heard it played at a concert. It was the 4th movement (March to the scaffold) of Symphonie Fantastique by Hector Berlioz. A perfect choice!

This isn’t my favourite type of radio drama so I am not 100% certain but I am sure (based on discussions with other collectors) that all of these dramas do exist although they may be only available in private collections.

Carbonel will know better than I if it has since been found, but I will put out a few enquiries and get back.

I have joined this discussion in the hope that it might just be possible to hear this wonderful drama again. I was 19 at the time this was broadcast, a student at Lancaster University, enjoying the wonderful summer of that year and thankfully free to listen every Tuesday. I subsequently read the novel twice and have always been astounded that it was made into a musical (never seen it). I did record a couple of episodes but only to listen again at the time, I never kept them. It was such a beautiful adaptation, I really hope that it might become available in some way, any news anyone?

Welcome to the forum. The recordings do exist in private collections even if the BBC didn't look after it. I do know some people who have it, but they are concered about the BBC's copyright, so keep it private an do not upload it to the internet etc, unless they can swap it for something they do not have in their collection.